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o·pen bor·ders

1. An immigration policy allowing the free movement of people between nations.

“Currently Going Through Customs Even Though I Was Born On This Planet.” —Jaden Smith, righteously indignant on Twitter

Why Do We Build the Wall?

On immigration, per usual, the current administration is dangerous and incoherent. Most recently, Trump ordered an end to DACA, then launched a bizarre attempt to deal with Democrats to pass it through Congress. Yet when it comes to alternatives, even many anti-Trump federal legislators won't go beyond the tired refrain of “comprehensive immigration reform.” Some organizers, however, are pushing for more radical solutions, from an end to deportations to the end of immigration restrictions entirely.

Making the Case

You don’t have to be all that woke to support, at minimum, equality of opportunity—for every kid to have a shot at the American Dream no matter what circumstances they’re born into. Yet this opportunity is precisely what border control eliminates. University of Toronto political scientist Joseph Carens compares today’s immigration regime to a new feudal order: The accident of birth—in this case, where your family lives with respect to artificial lines established through centuries of wars and treaties you had nothing to do with—puts legal constraints, enforceable by violence, on the life you can live and where you can travel. And if that weren't enough, studies suggest open borders would do wonders for global GDP.

Workers Of the World, Divided?

Historically, many vocal critics of open borders have come from progressive circles. Some environmentalists have worried immigration could contribute to overpopulation, though this penchant for scapegoating has somewhat abated. More notably, some labor unions have argued that exploited foreign labor would undercut pay and positions for U.S. workers; Bernie Sanders, in 2015, called open borders “a Koch Brothers proposal.” Yet, advocates say, this outcome is by no means inevitable. Legalizing migration might also further empower immigrant workers to organize and demand their rights in the workplace, raising the floor for all workers.

A Dream Come True?

Open borders may sound utopian, the pipe dream of someone whose primary political influence is John Lennon’s “Imagine.” But strict immigration laws are relatively new in the scheme of things, first popping up in this country with the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act. More restrictions arose over the years, and the contemporary big-stick approach took off in 1986, when Reagan’s immigration law granted amnesty to current undocumented immigrants but ramped up future enforcement. Even today, many who really want to come to the U.S. find a way—we just send armed guards after them and make their lives as painful as possible. In the end, open borders is far less fanciful than the faith of elites that they can turn lines on a map into something tangible and impermeable.

Open borders is a big idea but not particularly new. Anarchists have long subscribed to the mantra, "No borders, No masters, No gods." Open borders however, are not the same as no borders. There will never be open borders as long as there are nation States. Open borders must be part of a concerted rejection of the nation state as the primary means for organizing collective action to oppress people and planet.

Posted by subcomandante Felix on 2017-11-04 10:38:35

Open borders do sound like a John Lennon pipe dream. Under our current border regulations and enforcement does "every kid ... have a shot at the American Dream no matter what circumstances they’re born into"? I think the answer is no. When I look to your article for the reason that an open border will provide those opportunities, the best I get is, "Legalizing migration might also further empower immigrant workers to organize and demand their rights in the workplace." It might; these exploited workers would no doubt band together and demand, at the very least, minimum wage. That's certainly not a bad thing. I think you may be able to achieve such an outcome without a fully open border however. An open border does not, by itself, make for a good, fair, or just world. Best to focus on justice, fairness, equality first, then open the border. If you are into Utopian pipe dreams you've got to put in the work.

Posted by Cadmiam on 2017-11-01 17:35:44

I was born on this planet, too, but I have to knock on Mr. Martindale's front door and ask him to unlock it before I can enter his home. Why is that? And if someone kicked in his front door, would that be illegal?